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Definition of Dividend warrant
1. Noun. An order of payment (such as a check payable to a shareholder) in which a dividend is paid.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Dividend Warrant
Literary usage of Dividend warrant
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Jurist by Great Britain Courts (1843)
"That when a creditor or any person duly authorized under his hand to receive his
dividend warrant, shall apply for the same, the official assignee shall ..."
2. The New-York Legal Observer by Samuel Owen (1847)
"First, the power of attorney set out in the pleas gave no power to Wakefield to
receive, or the bank to pay, by a dividend warrant, which is not cosh ..."
3. The Law Chronicle: A Monthly Journal (1855)
"The percentage on mortgaged property to be calculated only on the residue payable
to the bankrupt's estate. For drawing every dividend warrant, or renewed ..."
4. The Statutes at Large from the Magna Charta, to the End of the Eleventh by Great Britain (1797)
"... or belonging to the foid governor and company, or having any note, bill,
dividend warrant, or warrant for payment of any annuity or interen, or money, ..."
5. The Statutes of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland [1807-1868/69] by Great Britain, George Kettilby Rickards (1841)
"Embezzlement by Servant of the Bank of England of any Note, Bill, dividend warrant,
Bond, Deed, &c. of the Company. 35 G. 3. c. 66. s. 6. ..."
6. Historia Placitorum Coronae: The History of the Pleas of the Crown by Matthew Hale, Sollom Emlyn (1847)
"If any person or persons shall forge, counterfeit, or alter any bank note, bank
bill of exchange, dividend warrant, or any bond or obligation, ..."
7. The Revised Reports: Being a Republication of Such Cases in the English by Frederick Pollock, Robert Campbell, Oliver Augustus Saunders, Arthur Beresford Cane, Joseph Gerald Pease, William Bowstead, Great Britain Courts (1905)
"The plea then alleges that Wakefield transferred the dividend warrant to Messrs.
Ladbroke & Co., then carrying on the business of bankers in London, ..."